----Sources:
Neillsville Times (Neillsville, Clark County, Wis.) 2 May 1882

Greenwood - April
23, 1882

Editors Times:
Roads dry once more and the teeming hundreds are once more
permitted the pleasure of traveling hither and thither at their own
sweet will. It has been many a day that we have been hemmed in by
mud, and it is like a gold sunset to get upon dry land once
more.

The log drive had
nearly come to a stand still. Pat Sheean with his crew still hold
out on the man Black River, between here and the city we hear so
much of, Neillsville, Wis.

Jas. Scyth and Ole
Larson have formed the co-partnership under the firm name of Scyth
& Larson, and have opened a saloon.

C. A. Jones has
moved form our town and gone where the woodbine twineth; that is so
far, we suppose he forgot to leave his post office address, or ever
pay sundry little bills around town. He went away when the sun
shone not, or what is more commonly termed between two days.

Last Sabbath we
had the first dark sermon ever delivered in Greenwood, or rather,
the first sermon ever delivered by a colored divine. It was in
Schofield’s hall to a respectful audience.

John G. McKenna
and Lina Huntzicker were joined in holy wedlock, yesterday morning
by Rev. G. C. Andrews. Miss Huntzicker is a young lady recently
from New York. The newly wedded pair have gone up on the Wis.
Central R. R., but will returned to this place shortly. The very
best wishes of their friends do follow them.

Last week for a
little shoot, for amusement, not a competitive one, by three of the
Greenwood gun club, the following score shows the result: